European banking giants join forces: Can the euro stablecoin reshape the global crypto landscape?

For a long time, the “on-chain US dollar” has been the default currency standard in the crypto world.

Whether it’s Tether’s USDT or Circle’s USDC, USD stablecoins not only dominate market liquidity but are also gradually taking on roles as cross-border payment mediums, on-chain asset valuation units, and settlement tools.

The question is becoming clear: as more and more cross-border transactions, trade settlements, and capital flows occur on the blockchain in the future, who will define the “currency standard” on-chain?

On March 3rd, the Qivalis Alliance, composed of 12 European banks, announced that they will launch a 1:1 euro-pegged stablecoin in the second half of 2026.

This is not just a product launch but a formal response from the European banking system to the on-chain financial structure.

12 Banks Join Forces

The move by the Qivalis Alliance is a key step in Europe’s attempt to regain “digital sovereignty.” Jan Sell, CEO of Qivalis, clearly stated that the project aims to provide a regulated “domestic alternative” for the EU to counter the strong influence of US dollar stablecoins.

Members of the alliance include: CaixaBank, BNP Paribas, ING, UniCredit, BBVA, Danske Bank, DZ Bank, SEB, KBC, Raiffeisen Bank International, DekaBank, and Banca Sella. These names span core EU economies, and their participation undoubtedly lays a solid foundation for the credibility and future promotion of the euro stablecoin.

When the banking system chooses to issue stablecoins, essentially, it is doing one thing: extending bank credit and sovereign currency onto the regulated on-chain financial network. This differs from early crypto-issued USD stablecoins. It is not a market-driven growth tool but a proactive layout by institutional financial forces.

This kind of regulated stablecoin led by traditional financial giants contrasts sharply with many existing stablecoins issued by crypto-native institutions. Backed by national credit and regulatory guarantees, it is expected to attract more institutional investors and traditional enterprises into the digital asset space, opening up new application scenarios.

Robust Reserve Mechanism

The core of a stablecoin’s “stability” lies in its transparent and reliable reserve mechanism. The Qivalis Alliance is well aware of this, and their disclosed reserve plan is reassuring:

  • At least 40% held in bank deposits: ensuring high liquidity and immediate redemption capability, significantly reducing the risk of bank runs.
  • The remaining portion invested in high-rated short-term Eurozone government bonds: investing in low-risk, high-credit sovereign bonds not only maintains asset safety but also provides stable returns, further supporting the token’s value.

This “bank deposit + sovereign bond” combination is far more robust than some stablecoins relying solely on commercial paper or other risky assets, and it is more likely to gain trust from regulators and markets.

Future Structural Competition

Judging by current scale, euro stablecoins are unlikely to challenge the liquidity advantage of USD stablecoins in the short term. There is no dispute about this.

But what is truly worth paying attention to is not “who is bigger,” but whether on-chain finance will evolve into a settlement system dominated by a single currency.

The importance of USD stablecoins lies not in their circulation within the crypto market but in their role as “on-chain settlement units.”

Once on-chain transactions, cross-border trade, and digital asset pricing systems are fully denominated in USD stablecoins, the monetary structure of on-chain financial infrastructure will become highly centralized.

The emergence of Qivalis essentially addresses this structural issue: if part of future financial activities migrate on-chain, does the euro have an institutionalized pathway to participate?

This is a form of “existence participation,” not scale confrontation.

From a broader perspective, stablecoins are no longer just liquidity tools in the crypto market. They are evolving into:

  • On-chain mappings of sovereign currencies;
  • New channels for government bond demand;
  • Alternative networks for cross-border payments;
  • Components of digital financial infrastructure.

The sequential entry of the US, Asian financial centers, and European banking systems is not coincidental but a response to the same trend—financial structures are moving toward digitalization and tokenization.

Therefore, the significance of Qivalis is not whether it can challenge the US dollar, but whether Europe can establish an institutional gateway before the next-generation financial clearing layer forms.

When banks begin issuing stablecoins, the focus is no longer on whether crypto is mainstream but on how mainstream finance will reshape its position in the on-chain world.

What truly matters is not whether the euro will prevail but whether on-chain finance will evolve into a multi-sovereign settlement structure.

If on-chain becomes part of global capital flows, then absence itself means ceding rules.

This transformation is not about price fluctuations but about a fundamental infrastructure reshaping.

Europe has already chosen to participate.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Markets carry risks; invest cautiously.

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